So I’m looking at trying am Immutable Linux Desktop (uBlue Aurora probably). One thing I’m not clear on is how to run GUI apps during development. From what I understand I should create a container with distrobox, install my toolchains in it and start developing. I’m used to containers for CLI and server work, but I’m not sure how it applies to the GUI (Wayland / KDE).
If I do a cargo run
inside distrobox for a Rust GUI project will it just work?
I saw that I can ‘export’ apps, but that is for already built executables whereas I will be building and rebuilding them.
In my experience it Just Works ™️. I spin up a distro/toolbox, compile some software (e.g. Emacs) then run the executable inside the container, and up pops the GUI window.
If you use distrobox, you can even
distrobox-export
desktop files, at which point a containerised gui application is practically indistinguishable from one installed on the host systemI’ve used Bluefin and Aurora for some light web development. I created a container with toolbox (I assume things would be similar with distrobox) and did what I needed. When I needed, I could run
npm start
and it was as if I had developed locally.Are you accessing that through the browser? It might just be bridging the networking in that case.
You should be able to run any executable you like in your home directory. No need for any containers. Try it out with a Hello World app.
The executable that I would be running is
cargo
(the rust build tool) but I want that inside of a container. I couldcargo build
inside the container and then execute the output binary on the host but then I lose things like hot-reload.Since OP is using an immutable distro they are likely unable to install some dependencies they need without using a container.
Distrobox supports GUI Apps (XServer and Wayland)
It should just work, distrobox supports graphical apps.
Spin up a VM with Aurora, and try to develop a simple GUI app in a distrobox yourself. See what it can do out of the box. I’ve been practicing getting a problematic VPN installed that way (on Bazzite), so that when I move to the bare metal version, I’ll be ready to go.
Also, if you’re unsure about distrobox, it’s just a wrapper for
podman
. If you need detailed settings beyond what distrobox can offer, you should look into podman’s options.How did you go with the VPN? I will be looking at that next. I’m using Proton VPN which has an rpm package, but if that doesn’t work I can fallback to manually setting up the WireGuard config.
ProtonVPN actually has a flatpak, and it worked for me when I tested it out a couple months ago.
But my personal use case is with Private Internet Access. I basically had to install it from source, tweak the installer by commenting out some lines that tried to write to
/usr
(which is immutable), install and modify the systemd daemon service manually, then install the.desktop
file for my local user. And for some reason, the OpenVPN tunnel doesn’t work, but WireGuard works fine.I may try my hand at making a flatpak or RPM for a cleaner install, but it’s seriously made me reconsider if I want to keep this provider, move to one like AirVPN, or go with a different immutable distro like NixOS or openSUSE MicroOS.
If ProtonVPN has its package in the Fedora repos or as a downloadable RPM file, it should be as easy as
rpm-ostree install protonvpn
orrpm-ostree install /path/to/protonvpn.rpm
.
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Do we have a lost lemmy users community yet?
Here we go: !lostlemmings@lemmy.world
Ah shit. That was weird. This post was near the casual conversation sub. Sorry about that.
ETA: thanks for the upvote to whoever appreciated my lack of sanity!
Dioxus desktop and fullstack worked out of the box. Bevy isn’t working because some Nvidia libraries aren’t in the container. I might need to switch to a different ‘GPU enabled’ image.